Monday, May 16, 2016

Email Calls-To-Action: Five Guidelines For Conversions

Despite the increasing demand to use social media, PPC advertising, and even full-scale apps to engage prospects, email marketing remains the most profitable communication channel online … period.

In fact, on average email marketing generates $38 for every $1 spent.

Why?

Because “unlike Tweets or Facebook posts, which are put up publicly, email is inherently personal — each person receives a message straight to his or her inbox.” In other words, email is direct and action oriented … or, at least it should be.

In order for your business to see massive ROI from email marketing, you’ve got to follow a winning formula to get your calls to action clicked.

To do that, here are five guidelines to for compelling email calls to action.

 

1. Less is more

What happens when you give people too many choices?

Easy. They get overwhelmed with analysis paralysis and end up making no choice at all.

That’s why the first key to crafting high-converting emails is to have one objective — a single goal you’ve determined before you even start writing. Take Whirlpool, for example, who increased their campaign click-through-rate by 42% simply by dialing back their calls-to-action from four to one.
However, once you’ve chosen your single objective, does “less is more” mean limiting each email to a single link?

Not necessarily. Copywriting expert Ray Edwards recommends in his book How to Write Copy that Sells placing a minimum of 3 links to your call to action in the email body.

Just remember: these three links all point your reader to the same basic objective. Here’s how Nathan Latka executes this principle:

Latka_email

Notice that the entire email and all three of the links are geared towards the single objective of getting the reader to join him on the live webinar. He places three opportunities for the click: once right off the bat, another towards the middle, and one at the very end.

 

2. Be specific

Your call to action has no time to be mysterious … or clever.

Simply put: if your call to action is too vague, people don’t know what you want them to do.

Start by ditching the “impressive-sounding” industry jargon and opting instead for clear and concise language that guides your reader with an expectation of what’s going to be next.

In addition, keep your audience’s goals and desires in mind when crafting your calls to action. Those will serve as a guidepost for creating the golden call to action that your reader will want to act on.

Venngage, which specializes in helping marketers make infographics, reports, and other visual collateral, makes their calls to action abundantly clear. There’s no mistaking exactly what you’re going to get, from “Watch Now” to answering specific user questions:

venngage-watch

venngage-text

 

3. Include actions

It might seem like this point should go without saying. After all, it’s right there in the title — calls to action.

However, many of us overlook the appeal of action words: i.e., verbs. Just be careful not to use worn out verbs that indicate an action nobody wants to take. On landing pages or online forms, Peep Laja, founder of ConversionXL, warns against using the word “submit”: ”Nobody wants to submit. Perhaps they want to subscribe, but definitely not ‘submit’.”

Instead, he suggests building your call-to-action words based on the ultimate outcome.

At the risk of being self-congratulating, GetResponse’s own monthly email marketing newsletter does this masterfully. In addition to providing links to each of our featured articles and resource, we always include an action-oriented CTA button:

getresponse-1

 

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On top of action words, to kick up your conversions with action words try incorporating the five most persuasive words in the English language: you, free, because, instantly, and new.

 

4. Never include “work”

Your reader does not want to work for your offer.

Therefore, any impediment you place between them and their desired course of action is going to result in lost conversions.

What’s this mean for crafting winning copy for your calls to action?

Start with avoiding friction words, which — according to Joanna Wiebe — are “words that describe things people have to do – not things people want to do”.

friction-words

Image Credit: CopyHackers

Instead, Joanna describes how your CTAs should be written from within your audience’s perspective, using low friction words like: get, discover, reveal, and earn.

 

5. Make it obvious

Part of directing your audience to your call to action is making it obvious what you want them to do — click.

This is true for your copy. But it’s all the more for your design. Don’t drop the ball by making aesthetic mistakes that obscure what you want your audience to do. All this really boils down to is “not making your audience think” when it comes to the three most common email CTAs.

Number one: make links look like links. It doesn’t matter what your brand’s style guide says or how you present links on your site. In email, stick to the basics: blue underlined text:

email-link-obvious

Image Credit: iconiContent

Number two: make button look like buttons. Use contrasting colors not only to highlight your email’s buttons, but to ensure they appear clickable (especially because in email “hover over” options don’t yet exist):

email-button

Number three: make social media icons look like social media icons. GetResponse found that simply adding social media sharing buttons to your regular emails increased the overall conversion rate by 158%:

GRSocialIconsInfographicSection

 

Action means action…

Email marketing is still one of the most successful places to communicate with your prospects and grow your business.
However, increasing your email conversions means following these five call-to-action guidelines:

  1. Less is more
  2. Be specific
  3. Include actions
  4. Never make them “work”
  5. Make it obvious

Did we leave out a winning technique that you use to make compelling calls to action? Let us know in the comments below.

The post Email Calls-To-Action: Five Guidelines For Conversions appeared first on GetResponse Blog - Email Marketing Tips.

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